Atlascopcosaurus

Atlascopcosaurus loadsi

Pronounced:
Atlasscop-coe-Saw-rus

Diet: Herbivore (plant eater)

Name Means: Atlas Copco
Lizard

Length: 10 feet (3 m)

Height: 3 feet (1 m)

Weight: 250 pounds (120
kilos)

Time: Early Cretaceous 118
MYA

Fossil remains for this Dinosaur have been found in Australia

Atlascopcosaurus was a small, primitive-looking
plant-eater from Australia known only from a jaw fragment
and a few teeth.

It is a good example of how scientists can learn a great deal
about a dinosaur from a very small amount of fossil material.
Atlascopcosaurus's teeth are similar enough to other members of
the Hypsilophodon family
to place it in that group, but different enough to establish a
new genus.

The distinction that leads scientists to believe that it was
a separate genus is the number of ridges on the teeth and their
placement in the jaw.

Atlascopcosaurus was named for a sponsor of the expedition
that discovered the dinosaur - the Atlas Copco Corporation.